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Oyuna mümkün olduğunca fazla oyuncu çekmek.
Can the frayed relationship between the United States and Turkey be repaired?
As Recep Tayyip Erdogan approaches the end of his first decade of rule, the question for American and European policymakers should not be whether Turkey should join the European Union, but whether it even belongs in NATO.
Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan's message during his monthly television address in June was clear: Ataturk is dead, but Islam lives on.
Turkey has changed from a secular nation to an Islamic republic that is more aligned to Iran than to the democracies of Europe, shifting it from an American ally to an enemy.
The majority of Arab civil society may celebrate Bush's election rebuke, but Arab reformers may find they have missed their best opportunity, while dictators and theocrats seize theirs.
IfTurkey's Justice and Reconciliation Party (AKP) is able to translate money into power and power into money, then the main loser will be Turkish secularism.
The United States needs to deal withTurkey's PKK; it is unacceptable to turn a blind eye to a group that attacks a democracy and murders civilians.




